Known for Acting

Jean Claudio (28 March 1927 – 11 January 1992) was a French actor. He began his acting career in the cinema at the age of ten, playing the role of the Tsarevich, son of Tsar Nicolas II in The Imperial Tragedy. In 1938, at the age of eleven, he played Mathieu Sorgue in Les Disparus de Saint-Agil by Christian-Jaque. He entered the Paris Conservatory, where, at fourteen, he was given the role of Chérubin in Le Mariage de Figaro. He has since had an international career, particularly in the United States. He wrote a collection of poems, Les faux joies (published in 1950), as well as several novels: The Hot Season, Les Torts Reciprocals, Monsieur Damoclès and L'inconnu de Genève. Source: Article "Jean Claudio" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
1966
as Sergeant Thomas
1965
as Raoul Maxim
1964
as The Man at the Swimming Pool (uncredited)
1982
as Vittorio Orta, Director of GTI-Italy
1938
as Mathieu Sorgue
1956
as Lionel Villaret
1970
as Fédor 'La Filature'
1964
as Roger Armand
1969
as Kassik
1938
as Paul de Vétheuil
1967
as Charlos Bianchi
1943
as Félix child
1962
as Sergio Di Tula
1971
as Business agent
1984
as Consul de France
1959
as Le grand-duc russe
1939
as Un enfant
1942
as Angelo
1941
as Lucien "le sans nom"
1959